Friday, October 29, 2010

Mornings in Mexico

D.H. Lawrence's Mornings in Mexico is less a travel book, as the title might imply, than a work of anthropology and metaphysics. He observes the Mexican and American Indian rituals and dances, attends their fiestas, walks their streets, and draws his conclusions. A trip to the market, where he haggles over fruit and sandals, produces the observation that the real purpose of all the buying and selling is not money but human contact. "Only that which is utterly intangible, matters. The contact, the spark of exchange. That which can never be fastened upon, forever gone, forever coming, never to be detained: the spark of contact."

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